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Problem Solving and Algorithm Design

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1 Problem Solving and Algorithm Design
Chapter 6 Problem Solving and Algorithm Design Nell Dale • John Lewis

2 Chapter Goals Determine whether a problem is suitable for a computer solution Describe the computer problem-solving process and relate it to Polya’s How to Solve It list Distinguish between following an algorithm and developing one Apply top-down design methodology to develop an algorithm to solve a problem

3 Chapter Goals (cont.) Define the key terms in object-oriented design
Apply object-oriented design methodology to develop a collection of interacting objects to solve a problem Discuss the following threads as they relate to problem solving: information hiding, abstraction, naming things, and testing

4 Problem Solving Problem solving is the act of finding a solution to a perplexing, distressing, vexing, or unsettled question

5 Problem Solving G. Polya wrote How to Solve It: A New Aspect of Mathematical Method His How to Solve It list is quite general Written in the context of solving mathematical problems The list becomes applicable to all types of problems

6 Ask Questions... …to understand the problem
What do I know about the problem? What is the information that I have to process in order the find the solution? What does the solution look like? What sort of special cases exist? How will I recognize that I have found the solution?

7 Look for Familiar Things
You should never reinvent the wheel In computing, you see certain problems again and again in different guises A good programmer sees a task, or perhaps part of a task (a subtask), that has been solved before and plugs in the solution

8 Divide and Conquer Break up a large problem into smaller units that we can handle Applies the concept of abstraction The divide-and-conquer approach can be applied over and over again until each subtask is manageable

9 Algorithms An algorithm is set of instructions for solving a problem or subproblem in a finite amount of time using a finite amount of data The instructions are unambiguous

10 Computer Problem-Solving
Figure 6.2 The computer problem-solving process

11 Figure 6.3: The Interactions Between Problem-Solving Phases

12 Pseudocode Uses a mixture of English and formatting to make the steps in the solution explicit

13 Following an Algorithm
Preparing a Hollandaise sauce Figure 6.4

14 Following an Algorithm (cont.)
Preparing a Hollandaise sauce Page 150

15 Developing an Algorithm
The plan must be suitable in a suitable form Two methodologies that currently used Top-down design Object-oriented design

16 Top-Down Design Breaking the problem into a set of subproblems called modules Creating a hierarchical structure of problems and subproblems

17 Top-Down Design Figure An example of top-down design This process continues for as many levels as it takes to expand every task to the smallest details A step that needs to be expanded is an abstract step

18 A General Example Planning a large party
Figure 6.6 Subdividing the party planning

19 A Computer Example Problem
Create an address list that includes each person’s name, address, telephone number, and address This list should then be printed in alphabetical order The names to be included in the list are on scraps of paper and business cards

20 A Computer Example Page 156

21 A Computer Example Page 157

22 A Computer Example Page 158

23 A Computer Example Page 159

24 Testing the Algorithm The process itself must be tested
Testing at the algorithm development phase involves looking at each level of the top-down design

25 Testing the Algorithm Desk checking: sit at a desk with a pencil and paper and work through the design Walk-through: Manual simulation of the design by the team members Take sample data values and simulate the design using the sample data Inspection: The design is handed out in advance, and one person (not the designer) reads the design line by line while the others point out errors

26 Object-Oriented Design
A problem-solving methodology that produces a solution to a problem in terms of self-contained entities called objects An object is a thing or entity that makes sense within the context of the problem For example, a student

27 Object-Oriented Design
A group of similar objects is described by an object class, or class A class contains fields that represent the properties and behaviors of the class A field can contain data value(s) and/or methods (subprograms) A method is a named algorithm that manipulates the data values in the object

28 Relationships Between Classes
Containment “part-of” An address class may be part of the definition of a student class Inheritance Classes can inherit data and behavior from other classes “is-a”

29 Object-Oriented Design Methodology
Four stages to the decomposition process Brainstorming Filtering Scenarios Responsibility algorithms

30 CRC Cards Page 165

31 Brainstorming A group problem-solving technique that involves the spontaneous contribution of ideas from all members of the group All ideas are potential good ideas Think fast and furiously first, and ponder later A little humor can be a powerful force Brainstorming is designed to produce a list of candidate classes

32 Filtering Determine which are the core classes in the problem solution
There may be two classes in the list that have many common attributes and behaviors There may be classes that really don’t belong in the problem solution

33 Scenarios Assign responsibilities to each class
There are two types of responsibilities What a class must know about itself (knowledge) What a class must be able to do (behavior) Encapsulation is the bundling of data and actions in such a way that the logical properties of the data and actions are separated from the implementation details

34 Responsibility Algorithms
The algorithms must be written for the responsibilities Knowledge responsibilities usually just return the contents of one of an object’s variables Action responsibilities are a little more complicated, often involving calculations

35 Computer Example Let’s repeat the problem-solving process for creating an address list Brainstorming and filtering Circling the nouns and underlining the verbs Page 171

36 Computer Example First pass at a list of classes Page 172

37 Computer Example Filtered list Page 172

38 CRC Cards Page 173

39 Responsibility Algorithms
Page 175

40 Information Hiding Deferring the details
Giving a name to a task and not worrying about how the task is to be implemented until later Abstraction and information hiding are two sides of the same coin

41 Information Hiding Abstraction is the result with the details hidden
Data abstraction refers to the view of data Procedural abstraction refers to the view of actions Control abstraction refers to the view of a control structure

42 Programming Languages
Instructions written in a programming language can be translated into the instructions that a computer can execute directly Program: a meaningful sequence of instructions for a computer Syntax: the part that says how the instructions of the language can be put together Semantics: the part that says what the instructions mean


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